2. NEWS

In letters sent to countries by email on 15 December, the Global Fund provided countries with information on their allocations for 2017-2019. The letters include an indicative split for the three diseases – HIV, TB, and malaria. The Fund encourages programs to support resilient and sustainable systems for health; the funds for such programs will need to be carved out of the allocations for the diseases.

3. NEWS

The Fund has identified 14 initiatives it seeks to enhance the effectiveness of by implementing its Prioritized Action Plan, or PAP. This article explains the PAP, what it monitors and assesses, and elaborates upon the purpose behind it.

4. NEWS

Whether the Secretariat should have a presence in high-risk countries was one of the items discussed at the recent Board meeting in Montreux, Switzerland. This article provides a summary of a paper on the current business model prepared for the meeting.

5. NEWS

Although national supply chain inefficiencies are resulting in a number of significant issues affecting Global Fund operations in-country, the Fund is aware of the problem and is working to resolve the issues. Such issues range from stock-outs and expirations of drugs and supplies, and to overstocking.

6. NEWS

In June 2016, the Strategy Committee determined the process to be used to make qualitative adjustments to the initial allocations derived from the application of the disease burden/income level formula. An article in GFO 301 described the two stages of the process: epidemiological considerations and holistic adjustment. In this article, we provide information on the parameters being used to make the adjustments.

7. NEWS

In February 2016, a second window of Regional Concept Notes, or RCNs, were submitted to the Global Fund. As a result of this process, ICASO and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance conducted six case studies of the respective RCN development. This article highlights the report findings.

8. NEWS and ANALYSIS

This article provides information about how the research of the clinical protocols for opioid substitution therapy supported by the Global Fund, contributes towards sustainability of harm reduction programs in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

9. NEWS and ANALYSIS

Work carried out by Dr. Abdhalah Ziraba of the African Population and Health Research Center, reveals country actions through Implementation Through Partnership-ITP, or the implementation of country roadmaps, are proving to be successful in addressing absorption bottlenecks and such efforts should be sustained and institutionalized in countries facing significant absorption challenges.

11. NEWS and ANALYSIS

In its final report released last week, the Equitable Access Initiative recommended that a multi-criteria framework be used instead of World Bank income level classifications in policies affecting eligibility for funding and the allocation of resources. The recommendations apply to all donors, not just the Global Fund.

12. NEWS

Low absorptive capacity of Global Fund grants and its implications for programming in countries

9. NEWS and ANALYSIS

19 Dec 2016

Author:

Abdhalah Ziraba

The Global Fund defines absorptive capacity as the percentage of actual expenditure compared to the total grant budget. Countries have long reported various policy and operational barriers that hinder their ability to fully absorb donor funds.

Some authorities in “development circles” have argued that higher relative aid flows in a country with low absorptive capacity have the potential to increase cost of service delivery, affect quality of service delivery, or both. Based on this logic, there are suggestions that countries with low absorptive capacity should receive only what they can absorb. In either case, health needs for which funding is available may go unmet.

At the 36th Board meeting held in November 2016, the Secretariat, in its analysis, explained that in the best-case scenario, approximately US$1.1 billion in grant funds will remain unutilized at the end of 2017. These funds will be added en bloc to the 2017-2019 allocations. However, individual countries will not be able to carry over their unused funds to their 2017-2019 allocation.. The funding implication of this is that the allocation intended for the 2015-17 cycle will be factored into the subsequent country allocations. Countries with unutilized grants at the end of the current allocation cycle will not be able to carry over that money to the next allocation period. Such funds will be put back into the ‘pool’ for future allocations.

Further, “unutilized grants” will be a qualitative adjustment factor for allocation in the new funding cycle. The challenge is that most countries with high burden of disease the and least ability to pay for the prevention and treatment of the three diseases, are also faced with significant absorptive capacity challenges.

Work carried out by the African Population and Health Research Center - APHRC, shows that in 34 countries within the two Africa constituencies that were assessed, only about 65% of funds from signed grants for the last three years had been disbursed. While this estimate does not use actual country expenditure, disbursement is dependent on balances in the countries, and therefore is a rough estimate of grant utilization.

APHRC work also identified broad categories of causes of low absorptive capacity including:

Low capacity of country coordinating mechanisms (CCM) and Principle Recipients (PR) (examples include fear of making ineligible expenses which would mean a country having to refund such expenses; and delays in selecting sub-recipients who carry out the actual work on the ground);

High levels of government bureaucracy; restrictive national policies;

Reprogramming (changes to programming are necessitated often as a result of plans that were based on poor data and cannot be implemented);

APHRC’s assessment concluded that most challenges identified were operational and are amenable to in-country actions/interventions while others were country specific and require contextual responses.

The Fund's Secretariat has recognized low absorptive capacity as a challenge facing grant implementation in countries. A total of 20 countries, of which 18 are African, are considered high impact (have a substantial burden of disease and Fund investment) and have low absorptive capacity (estimated at 69%). Responding to this challenge, The Fund's Secretariat initiated the ITP initiative (see previous GFO article here) to support countries in taking specific actions to change this. Building on the ITP initiative, APHRC conducted a rapid assessment to assess country progress against set milestones.

This assessment was carried out in ten high impact countries in the West and Central African constituency that developed and implemented tailored country roadmaps of priority actions to improve absorption. Overall, the countries reported progress in key areas including strengthening country coordinating mechanism leadership; and improving operational; financial and supply chain management. Taken together, country actions through ITP or implementation of country roadmaps are proving to be successful in addressing absorption bottlenecks. Such efforts should be sustained and institutionalized in countries facing significant absorption challenges.

Going forward, the onus is on countries to fast track their implementation and submit reallocation proposals if needed. This call to action is supported by the recommendations made by the two constituencies’ meeting held in Rwanda in November 2016 (for further reading on this meeting, please see the previous GFO article here) The resolutions that could directly improve implementation include: strengthening the CCM; improving procurement & supply chain management cycle; improving performance in high-risk environments; and building local capacity for greater sustainability. All these are anchored in developing resilient and sustainable systems for health. Activities for these could be supported by the catalytic funding which will be available in the new funding cycle.